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Oct 30, 2012
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[laughter] and i think he sides more with simon. [laughter] actually, i do too in a number of ways that probably will surprise him and dennis and others. and the first thing on which i agree with you, simon, is that i also do not know what the next systemic crisis will be, and i am as frightened as you of it. so when i think about what the next systemic crisis might be, i think the best place to start is to think about what's caused the last ones, and i'm not going to fight over whether we've had panics in 1907 or 1933. we heard that from the first panel. i'll just go back over the last 20 years for the systemic crises we've had most recently. the first one in 1994, scheherazade, you mentioned mexico. and that was a solvency crisis because we feared that a country would go bust, ie, its credit was no good, and that would ripple with dangerous effect through the banking system. that got handled, and we puttered on til 1998 when russia and indonesia posed financial risk in the solvency system, and we managed that and puttered along, t
[laughter] and i think he sides more with simon. [laughter] actually, i do too in a number of ways that probably will surprise him and dennis and others. and the first thing on which i agree with you, simon, is that i also do not know what the next systemic crisis will be, and i am as frightened as you of it. so when i think about what the next systemic crisis might be, i think the best place to start is to think about what's caused the last ones, and i'm not going to fight over whether we've...
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Oct 27, 2012
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[applause] >> simon? welcome back, by the way. >> thank you. i'm simon johnson. thank you for inviting me and organizing another great conference. what can cause the next financial crisis? i have three things to say. first of all, i don't know. [laughter] and you don't know, and nobody knows. i worked on financial crisis for twenty five years, i was 2007 through over 2008 the chief economist of the international monetary fund, just down the street. i attended a lot of very interesting meetings during that time period with top officials and private sector people. poem who know as much as can be known about the world's economy and the world's financial system, they collectively and individually had no idea what was happening and what was going to happen in september 2008. the second thing i would say is look around the world. the european situation you heard of a nice summary just now, i'm much less saying about the political risk and the economic risk. i think ultimately italy will have to restructure the sovereign debt as 2 trillion euro in the outstanding debt.
[applause] >> simon? welcome back, by the way. >> thank you. i'm simon johnson. thank you for inviting me and organizing another great conference. what can cause the next financial crisis? i have three things to say. first of all, i don't know. [laughter] and you don't know, and nobody knows. i worked on financial crisis for twenty five years, i was 2007 through over 2008 the chief economist of the international monetary fund, just down the street. i attended a lot of very...
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Oct 1, 2012
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to the presidents and leaders and tell you exactly because of the luxury of time and my publisher, simon & schuster, i declined to get the meeting notes to get the exact detail to interview president obama and speaker boehner and the key players in this. i just want to take one quick snapshot from what happened that we didn't know about, which is critical. when the cops pull up less when the president was upset, he called the congressional leaders on a saturday morning at 11:00 o'clock a.m. the democratic and republican leaders were trying to work out their own deal. harry reid, the democratic leader, said to the president, mr. president, could you please leave the room? i have covered presidents for four years. i know of no other time where the president was asked the meeting in his own house that he had called. i asked the president about this. i said how did it feel to be voted off the island in your own house. because that is what happened. he said that he was not going to stand on protocol, that the problem needed to be solved. but in the next day, he called democratic leaders to th
to the presidents and leaders and tell you exactly because of the luxury of time and my publisher, simon & schuster, i declined to get the meeting notes to get the exact detail to interview president obama and speaker boehner and the key players in this. i just want to take one quick snapshot from what happened that we didn't know about, which is critical. when the cops pull up less when the president was upset, he called the congressional leaders on a saturday morning at 11:00 o'clock a.m....
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Oct 23, 2012
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i am ted simons. that is it for now. >> i was undecided until watching this debate. what i saw it in obama was presidential. what i heard was real leadership i appreciated the fact that he was straightforward, was candid about his own position and what i heard from governor romney was apparent and that didn't interest me. >> i think governor romney won hands down all these debates. >> i am so proud of president barack obama. he's a statesman. and what might romney is asked a question, he looks like a man that can't take pressure. >> mr. romney seemed to me to be a little wishy-washy. earlier in the debate he made a statement about having back for. they yet, bader piece states that he wants to work with china. he wants to deal with pakistan. >> i just want to say something about the moderators and the debates. they're one-sided i think. i believe governor romney and i hope people open their eyes and take notice of what's going on in our country. >> mitt romney actually answer the questions. he didn't tiptoe around them. everyone says he is tiptoeing and is not. he str
i am ted simons. that is it for now. >> i was undecided until watching this debate. what i saw it in obama was presidential. what i heard was real leadership i appreciated the fact that he was straightforward, was candid about his own position and what i heard from governor romney was apparent and that didn't interest me. >> i think governor romney won hands down all these debates. >> i am so proud of president barack obama. he's a statesman. and what might romney is asked a...
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Oct 14, 2012
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talking was reyna grande whose memoir is called "the distance between us" a memoir, published by sean -- simon & schuster. reyna grande tell us your life story. >> my life story? you mean the kerosene story? >> when you went to school and they did a sanitation check on you. >> oh, okay. yeah, when i came to -- in fifth grade one day than there showed up and the teacher said she is coming to inspect all the kids for lice. i was so shocked because i couldn't understand that happened in mexico because all of his head lice. we were all poor kids coming to school barefoot and dirty and we all head lice but in l.a. i didn't expect there to be lice and for a second there i thought maybe they cross the border illegally like i had. i got inspected and it turned out that i had lice. i was so afraid to go home and tell that to my dad because i didn't want him to think that i was still that dirty little girl he had left mine in mexico. i thought he was going to beat me as well because that was his favorite way of disciplining us. it turned out that my father was not angry at me and he didn't blame me and
talking was reyna grande whose memoir is called "the distance between us" a memoir, published by sean -- simon & schuster. reyna grande tell us your life story. >> my life story? you mean the kerosene story? >> when you went to school and they did a sanitation check on you. >> oh, okay. yeah, when i came to -- in fifth grade one day than there showed up and the teacher said she is coming to inspect all the kids for lice. i was so shocked because i couldn't...
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Oct 26, 2012
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[applause] >> simon? >> welcome back. >> im simon johnson. thanks very much for allowing me and organizing another great conference. what could cause the next financial crisis? i have three things to say. first of all, i don't know. i don't know and nobody knows. i've worked on financial crises for 25 years and i was from 2007 to august of 2008 the chief economist of the international monetary fund which is just down the street. i attended a lot of interesting meetings with top officials and top sector people who know as much as can be known about the world's economy and financial system and they collectively and individually have no idea what was happening and what was going to happen in the timber of 2008. the second thing i would say is look around the world. the european situation gave a nice summary and much less sanguine about the political risks and the economic risks. i think ultimately italy will have to restructure its sovereign debt at 2 trillion euros outstanding debt and the consequence of that are effectively and noble -- unknow
[applause] >> simon? >> welcome back. >> im simon johnson. thanks very much for allowing me and organizing another great conference. what could cause the next financial crisis? i have three things to say. first of all, i don't know. i don't know and nobody knows. i've worked on financial crises for 25 years and i was from 2007 to august of 2008 the chief economist of the international monetary fund which is just down the street. i attended a lot of interesting meetings with...
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Oct 27, 2012
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people go around it. >> simon company talked about monetary fiscal policy. their new book deals with that. you want to give this a short observation? was some interest in the united states on fiscal monetary policy? >> first of all, i would encourage everyone to read the work again on this issue. they have so won the papers if you don't have time, there's a great editorial opinion piece in "the wall street journal" in september 2009 called the blog that ate mandatory policy. they talk about how today to fill financial institution undercapitalized taking a risk, having big losses and operating and zombie formic monetary policy much more effective when you go into crisis. so while the mechanisms to work. it's a question of what will happen when undercover, assuming we do will recover. how that affect the ability of policy to control the economy and the ability or the impact of various changes in fiscal policy. on our fiscal cliff issues come i would say more like the distraction from the fiscal chaos will see after the election around these issues. what i woul
people go around it. >> simon company talked about monetary fiscal policy. their new book deals with that. you want to give this a short observation? was some interest in the united states on fiscal monetary policy? >> first of all, i would encourage everyone to read the work again on this issue. they have so won the papers if you don't have time, there's a great editorial opinion piece in "the wall street journal" in september 2009 called the blog that ate mandatory...
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Oct 19, 2012
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i am ted simons and that is it for now. have a great evening. >> i've made mistakes in my personal finances. i'm not perfect that i made those mistakes and i fixed them. the fact is that everybody has looked into these allegations that linda mcmahon has made an ace campaign has said it's completely false. from the danbury news-times every independent financial expert and what makes a lot of these attack ads that we have seen from linda met van especially troubling is the fact that during the exact same time, linda mcmahon still had not paid back the $1 million that she owed her creditors from bankruptcy 36 years ago. >> congressman murphy i agree that we need to talk about the issues in the state and you know an occasional financial slip is not what we are talking about here. you absolutely need to be honest with the people of connecticut. you need to be honest about your special interest loan. you need to be honest about your -- in washington. those are issues that are important to the folks of connecticut because they wan
i am ted simons and that is it for now. have a great evening. >> i've made mistakes in my personal finances. i'm not perfect that i made those mistakes and i fixed them. the fact is that everybody has looked into these allegations that linda mcmahon has made an ace campaign has said it's completely false. from the danbury news-times every independent financial expert and what makes a lot of these attack ads that we have seen from linda met van especially troubling is the fact that during...
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Oct 23, 2012
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many catholic groups are most notable in networks led by sister simone and the nuns on the bus have been vocal critics of the ryan budget which would cut spending of social services. republicans have been heavily influenced by the tea party movement in the past three years, and the tea party espouses of course that government should be far less responsible for providing the service. they believe that when the government provides social welfare it creates a culture of dependency among americans but i was struck that paul ryan use those words talk about welfare reform. so the american values survey asked americans whether they were more likely to agree that government policy and helping the poor served as a critical safety net or whether they create a culture of dependency where people are provided with too many handouts. so figure nine shows the percentage of americans were more likely to say that those policies create a culture of dependency. it's relatively few, only 32% of americans say social welfare policies create a culture of dependency. there is a gender gap here as well, not surp
many catholic groups are most notable in networks led by sister simone and the nuns on the bus have been vocal critics of the ryan budget which would cut spending of social services. republicans have been heavily influenced by the tea party movement in the past three years, and the tea party espouses of course that government should be far less responsible for providing the service. they believe that when the government provides social welfare it creates a culture of dependency among americans...
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Oct 18, 2012
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most important revealing scale in our whole paper is the personality to simon baron cohen. he is a whole bunch of items that i will give you a score on what is called systemizing which is the drive to understand the variables of the system and how those variables govern the behavior so if you like to understand subway maps, spreadsheets, any sort of -- chess, any sort of complex system if you enjoy doing that you you are high on systemizing and emphasizing is the drive to identify they emotions that another person as experience and respond with an appropriate emotion. so there's a big difference here. men are generally higher on systemizing and women are higher on empathizing and what we find is that libertarians are in a sense the most masculine out there and if you evenly analyze only the men, he just look at the man, libertarian men are the highest on systemizing of any of the three groups in the lowest on empathizing. the same thing for women. in fact libertarians are only group whose systemizing scores in absolute terms, systemizing scores are higher than their empathi
most important revealing scale in our whole paper is the personality to simon baron cohen. he is a whole bunch of items that i will give you a score on what is called systemizing which is the drive to understand the variables of the system and how those variables govern the behavior so if you like to understand subway maps, spreadsheets, any sort of -- chess, any sort of complex system if you enjoy doing that you you are high on systemizing and emphasizing is the drive to identify they emotions...
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Oct 17, 2012
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we have brian bilbray for challenger simon scott peters. we'll be right back. >> moderator: welcome back to good uttv debate between brian bilbray and challenger. i want to give the floor to you talking about medicare and how to fix it. bilbray: first a rebuttal. "the wall street journal" said they supported the right thing but in medicare as we know it. it wasn't some left-winger that said that. the other thing is they've got me on tape twice saying i wanted to and medicare. he cut my answer off for once and does i'd wondered if he'd release the whole answer that i gave an order that the public might have proposal. peters: you've been quoted as saying that medicare needs to be cut to sustain it. and that you're suggesting, how exactly do you do that? bilbray: you have to get the benefits. you have to cut the cost. we don't negotiate the cost of prescription to do that. to use the leverage to negotiate a price. we also know there's a lot of overbilling we need to take care of. and that's it in a very clear throughout this campaign. >> moder
we have brian bilbray for challenger simon scott peters. we'll be right back. >> moderator: welcome back to good uttv debate between brian bilbray and challenger. i want to give the floor to you talking about medicare and how to fix it. bilbray: first a rebuttal. "the wall street journal" said they supported the right thing but in medicare as we know it. it wasn't some left-winger that said that. the other thing is they've got me on tape twice saying i wanted to and medicare. he...
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Oct 21, 2012
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. >> host: and we have been talking with reyna grande, "the distance between us: a memoir," a simon & schuster title. you are watching booktv on c-span 2. >> joseph wheelan recounts the life of general sure didn't who forced the surrender of robert e. lee at appomattox courthouse. the author recalls general sure didn't postwar career, which included command of the u.s. army. it's about 45 minutes. >> i want to thank quiller ridge books for inviting me back and all of you people for coming out to hear about general bill sheridan, who out of the triumvirate of union generals credited with winning civil war companies probably the least known of them. the others being ulysses s. grant and william tecumseh sherman. 1937, the three generals appear together in a commemorative postage stamp. as part of a series with great u.s. military commanders. and to his right is sherman and sheridan is on grants left. this is appropriate because by the time the civil war ended, sheraton was sometimes referred to as the left hand of grant of the left-handed. he was 10 years younger than grant and sherman.
. >> host: and we have been talking with reyna grande, "the distance between us: a memoir," a simon & schuster title. you are watching booktv on c-span 2. >> joseph wheelan recounts the life of general sure didn't who forced the surrender of robert e. lee at appomattox courthouse. the author recalls general sure didn't postwar career, which included command of the u.s. army. it's about 45 minutes. >> i want to thank quiller ridge books for inviting me back and...
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Oct 9, 2012
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to the presidents and leaders and tell you exactly because of the luxury of time and my publisher, simon & schuster, i declined to get the meeting notes to get the exact detail to interview president obama and speaker boehner and the key players in this. i just want to take one quick snapshot from what happened that we didn't know about, which is critical. when the cops pull up less when the president was upset, he called the congressional leaders on a saturday morning at 11:00 o'clock a.m. something in democratic andemoat republican leader were trying to work outth the own deal harry reid, the democratic leader, said to the president, mr. president, could you please leave the room? i have covered presidents for four years. i know of no other time where the president was asked the meeting in his own house that he had called. i asked the president about this. i said how did it feel to be voted off the island in your own house. because that is what happened. he said that he was not going to stand on protocol, that the problem needed to be solved. but in the next day, he called democratic l
to the presidents and leaders and tell you exactly because of the luxury of time and my publisher, simon & schuster, i declined to get the meeting notes to get the exact detail to interview president obama and speaker boehner and the key players in this. i just want to take one quick snapshot from what happened that we didn't know about, which is critical. when the cops pull up less when the president was upset, he called the congressional leaders on a saturday morning at 11:00 o'clock a.m....
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Oct 30, 2012
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let me just say that we have been seeing this now as simon has pointed out to me. you know, pre-electoral cycles. this first started in 2006. in 2008, it happened again. in 2010 it happened again. i think this year, both parties are poor to go towards that point. i want to make two other points. there are two very startling findings in this. they have to be regenerated because we disaggregated by gender and race. the gap between how much progress men and women make of the same age, i say age is much bigger than i expected. it is very large. we are talking about between 40 and 50% of lifetime earnings. it is much bigger than the gap in pay between men and women of the same jobs. it has come down by half over the last 30 years. because 35 years ago, over a lifetime we were making double. i think there are very large, much larger, as i said before, larger than what i expected. i think it reflects two things. one is different choices of jobs and professions. but the bigger effect here, i think, is the much greater share of women who work part-time. instead of full-time
let me just say that we have been seeing this now as simon has pointed out to me. you know, pre-electoral cycles. this first started in 2006. in 2008, it happened again. in 2010 it happened again. i think this year, both parties are poor to go towards that point. i want to make two other points. there are two very startling findings in this. they have to be regenerated because we disaggregated by gender and race. the gap between how much progress men and women make of the same age, i say age is...
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Oct 8, 2012
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remember years ago the head of simon & schuster after i had published one of my books took me to dinner in new york city at one of these restaurants where you would never want to go where you have to pay. [laughter] and he said what's your next book going to be about in and i said, oh, well, i haven't decided. i'm going to do some thinking, some reading, some research. and he looked at me and said, what? i said, yeah, i want to do thinking, reading, reporting, weighing the alternatives, and he said why are you going to waste your time? [laughter] i said, well, that's what you try to do. and he said, no, no, no, you are one of our authors. i need to know right now, tonight, what your next book is going to be. i said this is, that's preposterous. he said, i need to know. now, he's one of these people who grinds on you, and you're at dipper alone no matter what would come up, he would bring the subject back to, oh, maybe you should do a book on that, what about this? he would just grind away. you may know people like this. [laughter] you may work for somebody like that. [laughter] even bet
remember years ago the head of simon & schuster after i had published one of my books took me to dinner in new york city at one of these restaurants where you would never want to go where you have to pay. [laughter] and he said what's your next book going to be about in and i said, oh, well, i haven't decided. i'm going to do some thinking, some reading, some research. and he looked at me and said, what? i said, yeah, i want to do thinking, reading, reporting, weighing the alternatives, and...
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Oct 21, 2012
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simon kenneth green has been instrumental in getting me here. one final slide. in this book, we talked mostly about barack obama here. rush is one chapter piercy imagine how much information they packed into this the paper talk about organic food, genetically modified food in the future could come environmentalism, solar power, vaccines, european science, gender research, science journalism, false equivalence, wore an excellent and important issues for 2012 and beyond. that said, that's all i have. thank you very much. [applause] >> by the book. it's worth the investment of me. i have a bunch of questions, but i'm going to go to the floor after only asking one of them. could you talk a little bit about how natural gas went from being clean burning natural gas in the environmental movement to the point where we now have a war on natural gas from the mainstream? >> that's a great question. john and sign has a great answer to this. natural gas is to be a turning of the environment must the environmentalist hippies to say this is a lot better than coal and oil. in f
simon kenneth green has been instrumental in getting me here. one final slide. in this book, we talked mostly about barack obama here. rush is one chapter piercy imagine how much information they packed into this the paper talk about organic food, genetically modified food in the future could come environmentalism, solar power, vaccines, european science, gender research, science journalism, false equivalence, wore an excellent and important issues for 2012 and beyond. that said, that's all i...
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Oct 19, 2012
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i'm ted simons. as for now, you have a great evening. >> i've made mistakes in my personal finances. i'm not perfect, but i made this and fix them. the fact is that everybody sues looking into these allegations have said that they are completely false. everyone from the connecticut post and the danbury news times, ever independent financial expert. and what makes a lot of these attack ads that we've seen from linda mcmahon especially troubling is the fact that during the exact same time, linda mcmahon still hadn't paid back the $1 million to creditors during bankruptcy 36 years ago. >> congressman murphy, i agree with you to talk about issues in the state. an occasional financial but this novel were talking about here. but you absolutely need to be honest with the people of connecticut. you need to be honest about your special interest loans. you need to be honest about your tenants in washington. those are issues important to the folks of connecticut because they want to know, can i trust the congre
i'm ted simons. as for now, you have a great evening. >> i've made mistakes in my personal finances. i'm not perfect, but i made this and fix them. the fact is that everybody sues looking into these allegations have said that they are completely false. everyone from the connecticut post and the danbury news times, ever independent financial expert. and what makes a lot of these attack ads that we've seen from linda mcmahon especially troubling is the fact that during the exact same time,...
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Oct 9, 2012
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come fly with me, wake up little susie, the simon and garfunkel version. radar love, the theme from mission impossible and, probably my favorite, where is my mind by the pixies. [laughter] so the burning question is, who gets to pick the songs? >> actually, you know, i was only tangentially aware of that, and i recognize it from your telling it. i really don't know. so it sounds like a great talk for somebody -- [laughter] probably i would say it's jpl, within their team probably. >> okay. and we can tell from their dress code they're a wild bunch, so that explains a lot of the songs. the last question i know you are an expert in, and that is your own trajectory into coming into planetary science and enjoying it and living with it. and i can see you're still enthusiastic about it. what have been the high points and the low points for you in the world of science, and what keeps you enthusiastic about it? >> well, the whole -- my whole time at nasa which is now almost 15 years is a high point in my career. so bringing -- i'm a computer scientist, but really
come fly with me, wake up little susie, the simon and garfunkel version. radar love, the theme from mission impossible and, probably my favorite, where is my mind by the pixies. [laughter] so the burning question is, who gets to pick the songs? >> actually, you know, i was only tangentially aware of that, and i recognize it from your telling it. i really don't know. so it sounds like a great talk for somebody -- [laughter] probably i would say it's jpl, within their team probably....
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Oct 7, 2012
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a historian, simon schama. this has always been a major national book prize with a host of us any previous winners, including among so many others, links to use, zora neale hurston, and the reverend or the king junior. and now, thanks to the vision, committed in sheer energy of one person, we now have a hot website and live streaming video of our event, national press club in several supporting lectures and presentations. you all know that one person is the lifeblood of the anisfield-wolf book awards, my dear friend and comrade, mary louise hunt. give it up for mary louise. stand up, mary louise. [applause] our annual ceremony has become an event in cleveland social intellectual calendar and that takes an entire team of people to pull off, including ron of course, but also sandy shoals. cindy, please stand up in the six other team members who have worked for months to create this evening. give it up to cindy. [applause] as mary louise put it to me just yesterday, and i quote an e-mail, making sure it's going to
a historian, simon schama. this has always been a major national book prize with a host of us any previous winners, including among so many others, links to use, zora neale hurston, and the reverend or the king junior. and now, thanks to the vision, committed in sheer energy of one person, we now have a hot website and live streaming video of our event, national press club in several supporting lectures and presentations. you all know that one person is the lifeblood of the anisfield-wolf book...
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Oct 22, 2012
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i'm ted simons and that is it for now. >> new jersey senator bob menendez and republican challenger joe kyrillos recently took part in their third and final debate. "the cook political report" listed this race as the likely democratic. courtesy of w. iptv in trenton, this is an hour. >> hello, i am jim gardner from six abc action news and we are here at the debbie tbi charden bureau with new jersey senate candidate, republican joe kyrillos and democrats robert menendez. our panelist with us today are univision reporter mariela salgado and matt friedman from the star-ledger. moderating with me, wabc anchors diana williams. we have a few simple rules to share with you before we get started. the format today will include questions of the candidates from me, diana and her to panelist. we will be around when the candidates will be able to question each other and there will be answers. >> moderator: the order was determined by a coin toss a short time ago and for fairness they will be time limits on the responses gentleman. the time limit is one minute. we have a lovely light system with yell
i'm ted simons and that is it for now. >> new jersey senator bob menendez and republican challenger joe kyrillos recently took part in their third and final debate. "the cook political report" listed this race as the likely democratic. courtesy of w. iptv in trenton, this is an hour. >> hello, i am jim gardner from six abc action news and we are here at the debbie tbi charden bureau with new jersey senate candidate, republican joe kyrillos and democrats robert menendez....
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Oct 26, 2012
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the markets may be engaging in an ongoing hazard accounting for some of the funding differential that simon of lightly references at the same time they are playing a morally without the safety net that would save them meaning that market shock in the case of either operational, sovereignty or liquidity risk of a large institution would be worse. it would be lanham brothers on steroids. that's what scares me and why we need to go back to the liquidation of authority. could work in across borders attritions? does anything work in a cross border situation? not well to read about 80% of all banks offshore assets are held in the u.k. and that is particularly true for the wholesale oriented institutions like jpmorgan. they are operating in 70 countries but to what they've got in bulgaria is not systemic. maybe in bulgaria is. that is a different question. to chase and the u.k. it isn't. those are afterthought operations. that's why the u.s. and the u.k. are very fall along and what they called a crisis management group to resolve that aspect of cross border banking. is it done? no peery dividing
the markets may be engaging in an ongoing hazard accounting for some of the funding differential that simon of lightly references at the same time they are playing a morally without the safety net that would save them meaning that market shock in the case of either operational, sovereignty or liquidity risk of a large institution would be worse. it would be lanham brothers on steroids. that's what scares me and why we need to go back to the liquidation of authority. could work in across borders...
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Oct 8, 2012
10/12
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CSPAN2
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come fly with me, wake up little susie, the simon and garfunkel version. radar love, the theme from mission impossible and, probably my favorite, where is my mind by the pixies. [laughter] so the burning question is, who gets to pick the songs? >> actually, you know, i was only tangentially aware of that, and i recognize it from your telling it. i really don't know. so it sounds like a great talk for somebody -- [laughter] probably i would say it's jpl, within their team probably. >> okay. and we can tell from their dress code they're a wild bunch, so that explains a lot of the songs. the last question i know you are an expert in, and that is your own trajectory into coming into planetary science and enjoying it and living with it. and i can see you're still enthusiastic about it. what have been the high points and the low points for you in the world of science, and what keeps you enthusiastic about it? >> well, the whole -- my whole time at nasa which is now almost 15 years is a high point in my career. so bringing -- i'm a computer scientist, but really
come fly with me, wake up little susie, the simon and garfunkel version. radar love, the theme from mission impossible and, probably my favorite, where is my mind by the pixies. [laughter] so the burning question is, who gets to pick the songs? >> actually, you know, i was only tangentially aware of that, and i recognize it from your telling it. i really don't know. so it sounds like a great talk for somebody -- [laughter] probably i would say it's jpl, within their team probably....